In "Quantum mechanics distilled," @michael_nielsen and I introduce application prompts, which have you use what you've learned to solve a problem. You won't be able to answer from memory but they're light enough to solve in your head. https://quantum.country/qm
A fun data point:
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Normally 85+% of readers answer our prompts correctly. But I noticed: one question in our new essay has a 60% success rate. Maybe it's the 1st application prompt? No, there'd been two already—but you could solve them through symbol shuffling. This was the 1st to require thought.pic.twitter.com/p2VcS9JEae
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Talking to readers about it, it's clear that this prompt was a bit jarring. Instead of drawing on automaticity, trying to remember an answer, this one asks for an answer you must produce anew. Definitely a heavier lift, but it sounds like "a good kind of hard" so far.
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The mnemonic medium relies heavily on the "lightness" of it and relative fungibility of its prompts, so we'll need to walk a careful line as we push on these more elaborate types of questions. If you've read the new essay, let us know about your experience with the prompts!
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Andy Matuschak Retweeted Greg Stanton
Wrote some notes on this topic this morning: https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z7U6zXNGgTz1aEpRDUe6eMxotrhK4tmgprcxh …https://twitter.com/HigherMathNotes/status/1243676191988436993?s=20 …
Andy Matuschak added,
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